Newcrest expands access to North American capital with TSX listing

Aerial view of the Red Chris mine. Photo Credit: Daniel Henshaw.Aerial view of the Red Chris gold mine in British Columbia, in which Newcrest Mining holds a 70% interest. Photo Credit: Daniel Henshaw.

Following its listing on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Oct.13, Newcrest Mining (TSX: NCM; ASX: NCM), Australia’s largest gold producer, hopes to improve the company’s global visibility and increase its North American investor base.

A spokesperson for the company said via email that a North American listing was “part of our strategy of pursuing growth in the Americas,” adding that Newcrest pursued the listing due to “increased interest from North American investors following our investments in Canada and Ecuador and the expansion of our exploration activities in the Americas.”

Around a third of Newcrest’s shareholders are based in North America and the TSX listing, it said, was timed to enhance the company’s trading offering to the North American market in response to growing investor interest in gold stocks.

“We consider that the TSX is the premier gold exchange where many of our North American peers hold their primary listings,” the spokesperson said. “The TSX has a strong representation of resources companies, which has attracted a lot of investment activity from the North American market.”

Newcrest is one of the world’s leading gold producers and is now one of the largest companies trading on the TSX by market capitalization, which currently stands at $24.5 billion.

“We’ve seen more interest in gold because of its resilience,” the spokesperson said. “Investors have re-discovered gold as a countercyclical investment and important allocation in their portfolio, and we believe the outlook for gold remains strong.”

The company will continue to retain its primary listing on the Australian Stock Exchange and its secondary listing on the Papua New Guinea Exchange.

The Melbourne-headquartered company owns and operates several mines, including its flagship Cadia underground gold-copper mine in Australia, the Lihir open-pit gold mine in Papua New Guinea (PNG), and the Red Chris gold mine in British Columbia, in which it acquired a 70% interest from Imperial Metals (TSX: III) in 2019.

The company has also expanded its footprint in South America.

In 2018, the company acquired an equity interest in Vancouver-based Lundin Gold (TSX: LUG) to help develop the Fruta del Norte gold project in Ecuador. In April, it acquired the project’s financing package, which comprises a gold repay credit facility for US$150 million, a stream loan credit facility of US$150 million, and an offtake agreement for 50% of gold production from the Fruta del Norte up to a maximum of 2.5 million oz., for a total cash consideration of US$460 million.

Last year, Newcrest signed a binding option and farm-in agreement with Cornerstone Capital Resources (TSXV: CGP), a Canadian junior with several assets in Ecuador, to earn up to a 75% interest in  Cornerstone’s Cana Brava and Tioloma properties, two early-stage gold-copper projects located in south-central Ecuador.

Newcrest also holds a 15.33% interest in SolGold (TSX: SOLG; LSE: SOLG), which is developing the Cascable copper-gold project in the country’s north.

The spokesperson declined to comment on whether Newcrest has plans for any new mergers or acquisitions.

Earlier this month, Newcrest announced its intention to press ahead with the second-stage expansion of Cadia, which, it said, will increase plant capacity to 35 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) from 33 mtpa and reduce the all-in sustaining costs (AISCs) by an estimated $22 per ounce. The quarter four AISCs stands at US$878 per oz. gold.

“Cadia is one of the largest, lowest cost, long-life gold mines in the world due to the application of Newcrest’s industry-leading block caving technology, and this investment helps Cadia maintain this industry-leading position,” the spokesperson said.

The estimated capital cost for the expansion is US$175 million, which is expected to add 1.8 million oz. of gold output and 67,000 tonnes copper over the life of the mine, with an estimated US$800 million increase in projected free cash flow,

In the 2019-2020 financial year, which runs from July 1, 2019 to June 30, 2020, Cadia produced 843,000 oz. gold and 96,000 tonnes copper.

Newcrest’s board has also approved a front-end recovery project at its Lihir mine in PNG, which primarily comprises the installation of flash flotation and additional cyclone capacity and cyclone efficiency upgrades, to improve grinding classification and reducing gold losses through the flotation circuits.

The project, the company said, will cost US$61 million and is expected to deliver additional production of 244,000 oz. gold through an improvement in gold recoveries of 1.2% over the life of the mine.

“Lihir’s long reserve life makes this improvement in gold recoveries particularly valuable to our shareholders,” the spokesperson said.

The mine produced 776,000 oz. gold during the 2020 financial year.

Over the next 12 to 18 months, Newcrest plans to advance Red Chris and farm-out its Havireon gold project, located 45 km east of its Telfer gold and copper mine in Western Australia, it said.

The company also plans to progress its early-stage entry approach and advance greenfield exploration to search for additional Tier 1 and Tier 2 deposits globally.

“We have a very strong balance sheet, conservatively positioned to enable us to progress our pipeline of organic growth options and exploration prospects,” the spokesperson said. “Our growth projects will be adding value to our existing, large-scale, long-life operations.”

At press time in Toronto, Newcrest was trading at $30.00 per share within a 52-week trading range of $29.51 and $31.25.

The company has 817 million common shares outstanding for a $24.5-billion market capitalization.

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